Those scumbags at CBS just had all of the Star Trek episodes scrubbed from YouTube, now that they offer it via "paid" YouTube. I hope those pigopolists don't really think I'm going to pay $2 per episode.

Meanwhile, there are a bunch of episodes of something called "Star Trek Continues" which is a kickstarted, fan-produced re-creation of the original series with the original characters, but with new scripts and new actors. CBS apparently is ok with this because it is distributed free of charge. They've done an incredible job of reproducing the 1960's style scenery, costumes, and special effects. The writing and acting, while naturally not up to par with the original, is still surprisingly good considering it's the television equivalent of fanfic.

I am not a big fan of the show but I know it well enough so I checked the link. I see that Grant Imahara plays Lt. Hikaru Sulu, Grant Imahara is more famously known as the guy who screams "FIVE! FOUR! THREE! TWO! ONE!" in numerous Myth Buster shows.

I realize it would involve money but you, IG, could always get the Original
Series (complete) on BluRay. That would, in the end, give you the ultimate
freedom to view the shows. You can even save money and get the same set on
DVD. Personally, I'd go with the DVD set. There's only so much "they" can
do to improve the sound and video, and on a series that old... even less.

Those scumbags at CBS just had all of the Star Trek episodes scrubbed from YouTube, now that they offer it via "paid" YouTube. I hope those pigopolists don't really think I'm going to pay $2 per episode.

Well I saw Rogue One. That's about all I can say... in the end, it doesn't
matter much that this film was "dark." This is a film that does not have much
to say, and spends >120min saying it.

Tyranny is bad, mm-kay, and sometimes rebels do bad things. The other 115
minutes are mindless action and the retroactive patching of a certain well-known
plot hole.

Some bad camera work, to boot. Maybe they were trying to throw the viewer
into the action and produce the feel that some of the scenes were hastily
shot by an embedded war journalist? Regardless, I found it jarring. MTV used
to do that on The Real World, right? Star Wars is not reality TV.